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You are at:Home»Markets»Venezuela stocks skyrocket 130% to record high after U.S. ousts Maduro
Markets

Venezuela stocks skyrocket 130% to record high after U.S. ousts Maduro

January 12, 20263 Mins Read
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A Venezuelan living in Colombia waves a Venezuelan flag and a U.S. flag at Plaza de Bolivar to celebrate after U.S. President Donald Trump said the U.S. has struck Venezuela and captured its President Nicolás Maduro and his wife Cilia Flores, in Bogota, Colombia, Jan. 3, 2026.

Andres Galeano | Reuters

Venezuela’s stock market has not only shrugged off the capture of former President Nicolás Maduro by U.S. forces, it has surged to a record high as investors bet that the battered economy could finally see a turnaround.

The country’s benchmark Indice Bursatil de Capitalizacion, or IBC, has gained more than 130% since the U.S. operation on Jan. 3.

The rally reflects optimism that Venezuela’s economy could stabilize after years of mismanagement, sanctions and defaults, with expectations growing that a reconfigured government may attract capital, revive oil output and normalize relations with the United States, analysts said.

And investors are trying to get in on the action. U.S. ETF issuer Teucrium on Friday applied to the Securities and Exchange Commission to create what would reportedly be the first exchange-traded fund focused on companies with exposure to Venezuela.

“In what is a fluid environment, we currently believe that Venezuela is more likely to experience regime continuity with behavioral realignment, rather than an outright democratic transition or system collapse,” BMI said in a note. “A pliant Venezuela would allow the U.S. to reinforce its regional hegemony, secure access to the oil sector on very favorable terms.”

“Investors began to price in Maduro’s removal from power as a precondition for sanctions relief and eventually a restructuring deal,” said Anthony Simond, investment director at UK-based wealth and investments firm Aberdeen. 

Simond said demand is coming from a broad mix of investors, including mainstream emerging-market asset managers, as well as hedge funds and distressed-debt specialists seeking asymmetric upside. 

However, it is important to note that Venezuela’s stock exchange is small, illiquid and not easily accessible to global investors, meaning price swings can be extreme, strategists said. Venezuela’s IBC soared 1,644% in 2025.

“Because Venezuela’s markets are thinly traded, even small shifts in expectations can cause large price moves,” Alice Blue, an integrated brokerage of financial charting platform TradingView wrote in a note. “The rally reflects hope and speculation, not confirmed outcomes.”

Investors have also rushed into the country’s sovereign and state oil company bonds since Maduro was captured. Renewed interest in Venezuelan bonds is primarily driven by optimism around potential debt restructuring, a development investors see as a way to unlock value frozen since Venezuela’s 2017 default, said Jeff Grills, head of U.S. cross markets and emerging markets debt at Aegon Asset Management.

Grills cautioned though that much of the stock rally is headline-driven. “At this stage, the rally appears to be largely tactical, rather than the start of a structural re-rating,” he said, noting that leadership changes alone do not yet amount to a full regime transition.

Venezuela’s external liabilities, including arbitration claims and bilateral debts — estimated at $150 billion to $170 billion, according to Reuters — complicates any recovery timeline, said Eric Fine, a portfolio manager from VanEck.

“Everything depends on that not being derailed. [However] if that materializes, this is a complete re-rating situation,” he said.



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